Willis Richardson
(November 5, 1889  November 7, 1977)

Willis Richardson, a pioneer in the black theatre movement, emerged as a playwright
at the dawn of the New Negro Renaissance. Richardson was a significant playwright
and drama anthologist during the 1920s and 1930s. However, over the past decades
his works have been largely forgotten. Within these contemporary times, few
people are aware of his true contributions to the development of black drama.
But among his contemporaries, he was recognized as a leading playwright. Such
is evidenced in an April 1940 letter he received from Montgomery
Gregory that called him a pioneer playwright.

Bernard Peterson has accurately described Richardson as a theatrical
pioneer who was the first critically significant and productive African American
playwright. Richardson forged the way for countless others who came after him,
many of whom were able to garner the laurels and accolades that he himself was
not accorded during his lifetime, much to his frustration and disappointment.
Not only did he have a passion for writing, and particularly drama, he was considered
a trailblazer among black dramatists.

In his own words, as early as 1922,
Richardson sent a letter to Gregory stating Negro drama has been, next
to my wife and children, the very hope of my life. I shall do all within my
power to advance it. During these formative years of black drama, Richardson
exerted his energies towards promoting and perfecting his craft.

Born in Wilmington, North Carolina, Richardson and his parents, Willis Wilder
and Agnes Ann Harper Richardson, moved to Washington, DC shortly after the Wilmington
Riots of 1898. The riots resulted in the death of sixteen blacks. It is evident
that this event had an impact on Richardson as a child, because he recalls it
in details in his unpublished autobiography. Aspects of his early life and the
identity of his biological parents are somewhat difficult to determine. For
a greater scrutiny on these aspects of his life, see pages 8-11 of Christine
Grays Willis
Richardson, Forgotten Pioneer of African American Drama.

Richardsons father, who read to him as a young boy, encouraged his interest
in books and writing. As a child, neighbors often criticized Richardson for
reading too much; however, in his own words he states I would forget the
rest of the world and become a part of the adventures of Frank and Dick Merriwell, the
Liberty Boys of Seventy-Six, the James Boys, and others too numerous to mention.

Richardson attended M Street School, later named Dunbar High School, which
was the first public high school for blacks in the United States. His experiences
at M Street had a positive impact on his life. Mary Burrill, his English teacher
who was a playwright, encouraged him. She was influential in having Richardsons
first play read and evaluated by Alain Locke. Angelina
Grimke, also an English teacher at the school, reviewed some of his poems;
and it was her play, Rachel,
that would give him his impetus to seek a career as a dramatist. In March 1916,
Richardson and Otto Bohannan saw Rachel.

As result of this experience, Richardson was motivated to study the techniques
of drama through a correspondence course. He had already completed a poetry
course through the same correspondence school. Finally, Richardson had contact
with Edward Christopher Williams who was principal
and his Latin teacher during the time that he matriculated at M Street School.

Williams served as an early mentor and encouraged Richardson to write. In Williams
words, Richardsons plays were the best he had seen from the black race;
and it was Williams (1923) who
was instrumental in having some of Richardsons plays read by Locke and
Gregory at Howard University. This was around the same time that Locke and Gregory
were setting up the Howard University Players. Williams and Richardson would
later collaborate on the play, The Chasm (1926).

After graduating from M Street School in 1910,
Richardson turned down a scholarship to Howard University because of his familys
financial circumstances. Rather than attend the University, he had to seek employment.
He began working at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in 1911 and retired
in 1954. It was at the Bureau that he met his future wife, Mary Ellen Jones,
in 1912. They were married two years later on September 14, 1914. Ellen and
Willis Richardson had three daughters.

Gray points out that Richardson was at one time considered the hope
and promise of black drama, a playwright whose work was in great demand by little
theatre groups and dramatic clubs . His plays were performed in black
high schools, colleges and universities and by community groups across the country.
Patsy Perry further elaborates that Richardson was recognized as the great
spirit encouraging the creation of A Negro Theatre movement. He supplied original
plays for black producers; and directed the Little Theatre Group in Washington,
DC.

His accomplishments and the firsts in his career were many. The
Deacons Awakening was his first play published in Crisis
(November 1920). On May 15, 1923,
The Chip Womans Fortune opened at the Frazee Theatre on Broadway.
It shared the bill with Shakespeares The Comedy of Errors
and Oscar Wildes Salome. The Chip Womans Fortune
was the first serious drama by a black that appeared on Broadway. It is for
this first milestone that Richardson is most remembered.

On March 29, 1924, his play,
Mortgaged, was produced by the Howard University Players. Except
for the plays written by Howard University students in Montgomery
Gregorys playwriting class, this was the first play written by a black
dramatist that was staged at the University.

There were many successes for Richardson during the height of the Renaissance.
In 1925 his play, Mortgaged,
was published in Alain Lockes The
New Negro. His folk drama, Compromise, was the first play
by a black dramatist to be presented by the Gilpin Players in Cleveland. In
addition to the previously mentioned accomplishments, he won first prize in
the Crisis Drama Awards for The Broken Banjo;
and he received an honorable mention for plays in the Opportunity
Contest for The Fall of the Conjurer.

The following year (1926) he
won first prize in Crisis plays category for Boot-Black
Lover. In 1928, he won the
Edith Schwab Cup at Yale University for The Broken Banjo. In presenting
this play, which was produced by the Dixwell Players, they won over eight white
theatre groups.

At the request of Carter G. Woodson, founder of the Association for the Study
of Negro Life and History, Richardson compiled his first anthology in 1930.
The plays in this anthology, Plays
and Pageants from the Life of the Negro, were written by black authors,
were not in dialect, and had subject matter suitable for school age youngsters.
James Lesesne Wells executed the illustrations for
this anthology. Five years later (1935),
Richardson co-edited with May Miller a second anthology, Negro History
in Thirteen Plays.

In addition to writing, Richardson was very active in the circle of other
writers. He was a regular between 1926-1936
with the Saturday Nighters at Georgia Douglas
Johnsons home.

Posthumously, Richardson was awarded the AUDELCO prize, which is a testament
to his excellence in black theatre.

________________. Propaganda in the Theatre.
The Messenger 6 (1924): 353-54.

Selected Plays

Richardson, Willis, The Black Horseman, The
Kings Dilemma, and The House of Sham, in Plays
and Pageants from the Life of the Negro, edited by Willis Richardson
(Washington, DC: Associated Publishers, Inc., 1930).

___________________, The Chip Womans Fortune,
in Anthology of the American Negro in the Theatre, compiled and
edited by Lindsay Patterson (Washington, DC: Association for the Study of Negro
Life and History, 1967).

___________________, Compromise: A Folk Play,
in The New Negro, edited by Alain Locke (New York: Albert and Charles
Boni, 1925).